Emotional Response to Traumatic Injury. Tara Fernandez SUMR Scholar 2013 Therese Richmond, PhD, FAAN, CRNP Supported by: NIH, R01NR013503

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+ Emotional Response to Traumatic Injury Tara Fernandez SUMR Scholar 2013 Therese Richmond, PhD, FAAN, CRNP Supported by: NIH, R01NR013503

+ ROADMAP Background Significance Aims Timeline Methods Intake Descriptives Role in Project Lessons Learned Acknowledgements

+ BACKGROUND: Health Disparity Black men have higher exposure to stressors and are more likely to be injured than white men Black men are also more likely to have psychological consequences after injury Less likely to be diagnosed and treated

+ BACKGROUND: Injury When suffering from acute trauma injury these patients are resuscitated, treated, and quickly sent back out to the community Many times psychological effects are not recognized Hinders a complete recovery Contributes to injury recidivism

+ BACKGROUND: Injury Risks Personal Institutional Environmental Known Outcomes Disability Injury Peri-traumatic subjective experiences Psychological Effects Depression PTS Substance abuse Injury recidivism Protective Personal Institutional Environmental Criminal behaviors

+ BACKGROUND: Injury The risk of sustaining a recurrent injury is 40% Being black is an independent risk factor for injury recidivism 37-58% admitted to a trauma service experience depression 20% admitted to a trauma service develop PTSD

+ AIMS Evaluate and refine a model elucidating the interplay among peri-traumatic subjective experiences, risk factors, and protective factors that that best predict the future development of depression and PTSD in black men after traumatic injury. Evaluate the predictive ability of two established, short clinical screeners to predict future development of post injury depression and PTSD and to examine whether predictive performance could be improved by including additional risks and protective factors Gain richer understanding of black males experiences, to elucidate strategies that enhance or detract from their attitude towards seeking help for psychological symptoms after injury

+ SAMPLE 900 black men admitted to urban trauma center with diagnosis of injury At least 18 years old English speaking Glasgow coma scale: 15 Living within an 18 mile radius Consecutively enrolling participants 120 men are enrolled as of 7/31/13

+ DEMOGRAPHICS Variable Age Relationship status Single Living w/ partner or married Trouble paying rent or mortgage in past 12 months Average or Percent 35.6 years 63.3 % 30.0% 49.3% Employed (full or part time) 42.5% Unemployed (looking or not looking) 48.4% Income (< $20,000) 38.3% Education (completed high school) 75.1% No primary care doctor 60.0% Couldn t afford to see a doctor 35.8%

+ METHODS Quantitative Data Measuring interaction between: Risk & protective factors Personal Institutional Environmental Peri-traumatic experiences with depression/ptsd Mixed Methods Qualitative Data Black males experience with injury Coping strategies Approaches towards seeking care

+ METHODS: Intake In-Hospital Structured Interview Conducted before discharge Survey, approximately 220 questions 45 minutes- 1 hour

+ Survey Instruments Peri-traumatic Subjective Experience Peri-traumatic Distress Inventory (PDI) RAND Peri-traumatic Dissociative Experiences Questionnaire Trauma Screening Questionnaire APS-POQ Pain Measures

+ Survey Instruments Cumulative Life Exposure Personal Risk Factors Education National Adverse Childhood Experiences Military Deployment Simple Screening Instrument for Substance Abuse Protective Factors Trait Hope Scale General Self Efficacy Scale

+ Survey Instruments Institutional Risk Factors Perceived Ethnic Discrimination Questionnaire Community Version Insurance Status & primary care physician Protective Factors Social Support Scale Environmental Risk/Protective Factors Address data Neighborhood Environment Scale

+ METHODS: Outcome 3 Month Post-Discharge Outcome Assessment Follow up visit; usually at participant s home Quick Inventory Depressive Symptoms Self Report (QID-SR) PTSD Checklist- Civilian Version (PCL-C) Qualitative Interview

+ METHODS: Outcome Qualitative Interview Recorded interview for randomly selected participants 1 chosen out of every 4 men Subset around ~180 men Open ended question

+ Intake Descriptives Predictive Screener n = 119 Variable %(n) Penn Predictive Screener Score # of Subjects above depression cutoff score 56.7 (68) # of Subjects above PTSD cutoff score 52.5 (62) Australian Screener Score % (n) # of Subjects above depression cutoff score 40.8 (49) # of Subjects above PTSD cutoff score 68.3 (82) Trauma Symptom Measures n = 119 Variable Mean (SD) Peri-traumatic Distress Inventory (0-52) 20.81(11.87) Trauma Screening Questionnaire (0-10) 3.94(3.22) RAND Peri-traumatic Dissociative (10-50) 21.62(9.53) Experiences Questionnaire

+ Intake Descriptives Risk and Resiliency Scales n = 119 Variable Mean (SD) Hope Scale Total ( Future *, 12-96) 70.76(10.09) Agency Scale(4-32) 25.61(5.24) Pathway Scale(4-32) 25.95(6.02) Hope Scale(Agency + Pathway, 8-64) 51.55(8.87) General Self-Efficacy Scale (10-40) 32.92(6.32) Perceived Ethnic Discrimination Questionnaire 32.72(14.09) (17-85) Exclusion (4-20) 9.32(4.16) Workplace Discrimination (4-20) 7.81(3.86) Stigmatization (4-20) 7.33(4.05) Threat and Harassment (4-20) 6.00(3.44) Police (1-5) 2.54(1.49) Social Support Questionnaire Avg Amount of Support (0-10) 3.16(2.51) Avg Level of Satisfaction (1-6) 5.57(0.77)

+ Intake Descriptives ACE Childhood Questionnaire n =119 Variable %(n) Subjects reporting at least 1 category 86.6 (103) Subjects reporting at least 2 categories 66.4 (79) Subjects reporting 3 or more categories 52.1 (62) Subjects reporting 4 or more categories 40.3%(48) Average # of categories per subject 2.82 (1.99) Neighborhood Environmental Survey Variable Mean (SD) Present (0-18) [n=59] 7.95(3.92) Past (0-18) [n=59] 7.83(4.14)

+ ROLE IN PROJECT Enter intake data Transcribe qualitative interviews Administer structured intake interviews Accompany interviewer on follow-up visits Conduct preliminary data analysis

+ LESSONS LEARNED Many factors affect people s health Be tenacious! Transcribing can be a cumbersome journey Valuable interviewing skills

+ ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Special thanks to: Dr. Terry Richmond Jessica Webster Andy Robinson Joanne Levy Shanae Johnson and LDI staff SUMR 2013 Cohort